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Thanks for that, I’ve read but I didn’t understand 100% as I’m not a lawyer, but I believe this case was for a person which was naturalized at a certain date. My italian citizenship was given on my birth, but it was not automatically recognized, so the process in Italy was a recognization of citizenship, but it was revoked due to a requirement of being resident on the comune(city) during the entire process, which I didn’t do.
That’s the problem how can I get legal advice from an italian lawyer if I live in the UK? Is it possible to go to the italian court from here? Or maybe sign a document here and send to Italy in the post giving the lawyer the right to go on court on my behalf? Sorry I’m pretty bad with legal things, I’m not sure if I understood it right, but there is a chance?mgb wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 7:19 pmYou should read section 20 of the linked judgement. Specially 1(b).
(b) acquisition of the nationality of the State Party by means of fraudulent conduct, false information or concealment of any relevant fact attributable to the applicant;
The magic words are "attributable to the applicant". If the whole thing was attributable to you, you have to know by yourself.
Maybe you should seek legal advice from a italian lawyer.
Richard W wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 8:41 pmExactly what was revoked? I believe it was your certificate of nationality and perhaps your birth certificate? Or are they saying that even if you were born an Italian citizen, you are no longer an Italian citizen? I expect it is just your certificates that have been revoked.
Your right to be in the UK and working depends on your being an Italian citizen, not on whether the Italian government has agreed that you are. In law, you can re-enter the UK on your Brazilian passport and, if need be, prove that you are an Italian citizen. The one part you are probably not prepared for is to demonstrate what the Italian law on the matter is.
The immediate practical problems arise if you lose your passport. A new employer would insist on seeing it.
In the longer term, your right to residence certificate, and your wife's to a new residence card, depends on your having a valid passport. You might also have a problem 2 years after Brexit, by which time you must apply for residence permits.
As I believe you are still an Italian citizen, your next step is to apply for recognition as such from an Italian consulate in the UK.
There are lawyers which offer their services via internet and can get paid via credit card. You should choose one who has some clue about italian citizenship law.DavidFratelly wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 9:24 pmThat’s the problem how can I get legal advice from an italian lawyer if I live in the UK? Is it possible to go to the italian court from here? Or maybe sign a document here and send to Italy in the post giving the lawyer the right to go on court on my behalf? Sorry I’m pretty bad with legal things, I’m not sure if I understood it right, but there is a chance?mgb wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 7:19 pmYou should read section 20 of the linked judgement. Specially 1(b).
(b) acquisition of the nationality of the State Party by means of fraudulent conduct, false information or concealment of any relevant fact attributable to the applicant;
The magic words are "attributable to the applicant". If the whole thing was attributable to you, you have to know by yourself.
Maybe you should seek legal advice from a italian lawyer.
How do you work that out. The right to citizenship to a person who is not natural born, is dependent on the holder having a form of declaration of Citizenship. For people acquiring it through ancestral links, this is dependent on residential criteria. If the Italian authority is saying the OP did not meet it, and the documents you used to obtain it was fraudulently acquired, then it has an implication on this right.
As far as I can tell, the certificate of citizenship is akin to the British 'nationality status letter'. Residence determines where one may apply for such a certificate, not whether one has inherited Italian citizenship from a parent. As far as I can tell, it is the OP's contention that he was born Italian, not that he was born with an entitlement to Italian citizenship.Obie wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 9:35 pmHow do you work that out. The right to citizenship to a person who is not natural born, is dependent on the holder having a form of declaration of Citizenship. For people acquiring it through ancestral links, this is dependent on residential criteria. If the Italian authority is saying the OP did not meet it, and the documents you used to obtain it was fraudulently acquired, then it has an implication on this right.
This is the situation here.
You have misunderstood what I said about the consequences of the OP being an Italian citizen with no immediate prospect of having an Italian passport. New residence documents and new employment depend on his having an Italian passport. I am not sure of the legal consequences of presenting a cancelled passport to a prospective employer as though it had not been cancelled - I suspect so doing is illegal.
The OP can therefore re-enter the UK using just a Brazilian passport plus evidence that he is an Italian citizen. This is another case where non-British EU citizens have greater privileges than a native - none of this business of passportless Britons officially needing a certificate of right of abode.EEA Regulations, Regulation 11(4) wrote:(4) Before an immigration officer refuses admission to the United Kingdom to a person under this regulation because the person does not produce on arrival a document mentioned in paragraph (1) or (2), the immigration officer must provide every reasonable opportunity for the document to be obtained by, or brought to, the person or allow the person to prove by other means that the person is—
(a)an EEA national;
No, the OP jumped the queue to get acknowledgement of his status. We've no indication that he was never Italian.
What case? He's lost some documents, but but for Brexit the OP has every right to stay put in the UK if he can become gainfully self-employed - unless, of course, he is not an Italian citizen. Now, I am not sure how he can prove to the Italian consulate that he is legally resident in the UK. Could he get a relevant stamp in his Brazilian passport?
The question is if the misbehavior of the italian civil servants is attributable to the applicant.Obie wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 11:58 pmThere are 1 question here to be answered. Does the law in Italy requires a person to have resided for 2 years in Italy if they are seeking to claim citizenship by descent? if the law requires this, but OP did not reside for that length of time, then he is not an Italian. He is therefore not a Union Citizen.
No!Obie wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 11:58 pmThere are 1 question here to be answered. Does the law in Italy requires a person to have resided for 2 years in Italy if they are seeking to claim citizenship by descent? if the law requires this, but OP did not reside for that length of time, then he is not an Italian. He is therefore not a Union Citizen.
Understandable if we have totally different understandings as to the facts of the case.
True enough, but I do not believe the conditions are satisfied.Obie wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 11:58 pmRegulation 11(4) has no application if the OP is not an Italian Citizen by virtue of the fact that citizenship was obtained by fraudulent means.
If he is not an Italian Citizen, then the EEA regulations is inapplicable and there can be no argument as he is not a citizen of an EEA State.
Agreed.
I do not believe that they have declared that. What they seem to have declared is that the OP has obtained what may be correct documents by fraud, and have therefore cancelled them. It would be helpful if we had a clear statement from the OP. Perhaps a pointer to an accurate account on the web would help, and then we could read it for ourselves, perhaps with the help of Google translate. Has the judge actually communicated directly with the OP?
It is possible that the situation is similar to this, or that Italian law is unclear on the difference, reminiscent of the current practical difference between being an Irish citizen and being entitled to Irish citizenship. (I know people who would be barred from their current work if they were Irish citizens as opposed to being entitled to Irish citizenship, so it makes a big difference to a few people.) I have seen a claim that it is acknowledgement and not acquisition, with the fact that no oath of allegiance needs to be sworn adduced as evidence. However, no oath is required in the acquisition of Irish citizenship by those entitled to it. There may be a similar lack of clarity with the Jamaican citizenship of those born to Jamaican parents overseas. Do they obtain confirmation of their Jamaican nationality or do they acquire it when they get the official confirmation required for a passport? I knew one guy who appeared to be in this situation but denied he was a Jamaican citizen; he should not have been working with us if he was a Jamaican citizen.The confirmation of British Citizen don't confer British Citizen , it simply confirms it. OP needed to fulfill the administrative process to acquire Italian citizenship. Very different process.The closer analogy I will say is the case of those qualifying under Section 4D, 4E and 4F of the British Nationality Act 1981, as amended.
The law doesn't require to reside 2 years, it doesn't say a time limit. It only says that you must be resident in the comune to start the process of recognition of citizenship. This process is not a naturalization, it's like you as british have a kid on another country(for example, USA), and register the kid there as US citizen. The process that I made is like the same as you bringing your kid to the British consulate so he can acquire the british nationality as the father has.Obie wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 11:58 pmTo be honest Richard, you are just driving me bonkers .
Regulation 11(4) has no application if the OP is not an Italian Citizen by virtue of the fact that citizenship was obtained by fraudulent means.
There are 1 question here to be answered. Does the law in Italy requires a person to have resided for 2 years in Italy if they are seeking to claim citizenship by descent? if the law requires this, but OP did not reside for that length of time, then he is not an Italian. He is therefore not a Union Citizen.
Richard W wrote: ↑Tue Feb 13, 2018 10:53 pmThe OP can therefore re-enter the UK using just a Brazilian passport plus evidence that he is an Italian citizen. This is another case where non-British EU citizens have greater privileges than a native - none of this business of passportless Britons officially needing a certificate of right of abode.EEA Regulations, Regulation 11(4) wrote:(4) Before an immigration officer refuses admission to the United Kingdom to a person under this regulation because the person does not produce on arrival a document mentioned in paragraph (1) or (2), the immigration officer must provide every reasonable opportunity for the document to be obtained by, or brought to, the person or allow the person to prove by other means that the person is—
(a)an EEA national;No, the OP jumped the queue to get acknowledgement of his status. We've no indication that he was never Italian.What case? He's lost some documents, but but for Brexit the OP has every right to stay put in the UK if he can become gainfully self-employed - unless, of course, he is not an Italian citizen. Now, I am not sure how he can prove to the Italian consulate that he is legally resident in the UK. Could he get a relevant stamp in his Brazilian passport?